Top Banner
Calibration You never know – it might be important.
15
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

Calibration You never know – it might be important.

Page 2: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

Flux density : 1 Jansky = 10-26 W/m2/Hz

Pr = ½ Aeff S d(Aeff:= collecting area, S:=flux density)

Pc = kTref d

kTA = ½ Aeff.S

Tsys = TA + Tspill + Tsky + Trx

Equivalent noise temperature

Pr

Pc

Page 3: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

What are we measuring?

• Typical receiver systems have large gain which varies with time.

Abandon detected power for calibration: use only equivalent noise temperatures.

~100dB

( )2Sampler

Page 4: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

The noise equation

Tsys = TA + Tspill + Tsky + Trx + T2.7K

Atmospheric“seeing”

Time, temp etc

kTA = ½ Aeff.S

Elevation

Position on sky

Page 5: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

NAR – noise-addingradiometerJargon:

“noise tube”

=“noise diode”

=“noise source”

=“cal”

Page 6: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

A real receiver …

Page 7: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

Antenna gain

kTA = ½ Aeff.S

TA /S =1/2k . Aeff

Page 8: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

Bandpass calibration

Calibrate bandpass by observing “off source”

Page 9: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

Interferometers…. at last

• Single dish : amplitude (vs frequency)

• Interferometer– Amplitude (but no large DC term)– Phase– Delay (phase vs frequency)

Page 10: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

ATCA calibration practice

• Fiducial calibrator (delays, amplitude)

once per ~12 hour observation

• Secondary calibrators (phase, amplitude)once per 10 minutes ~ 2 hours

linear interpolation of amp, phase

Page 11: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

Atmosphere Ionosphere dominant < ~3 GHz , ~ eutral atmosphere , ~ ”Outer-scale” ~ 30km

nstrumental effects

Phase errors

Page 12: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

• Measured visibility vs true visibility:

• Assume errors small:

Interferometer calibration

j*

i ijij G GV V

) (1 Gj jj i )( 1 G G *

j i jiji i

Real = amplitudePerfect response Imaginary=phase

Page 13: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

Image distortion

Amplitude errors(symmetric)

Phase errors (antisymmetric)

Page 14: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

Self-calibration

• Standard calibration : image quality ~100:1

• Self-calibration:Gi : N complex gains

N*(N-1)/2 visibilities (complex constraints)

Can solve for the Gi

Image quality >> 1000:1

Page 15: Calibration You never know – it might be important.

More to think about

• Self-calibration• Polarization calibration: online XY phases• Spectral-line (bandpass) calibration• Data flagging/editing• Absolute flux calibration• Pointing calibration• RFI• Astrometry (milli-arcsecond positions)